

2023 IMPACT REPORT
RMIT Culture acknowledges the people of the Woi wurrung and Boon wurrung language groups of the eastern Kulin Nation on whose unceded lands we conduct the business of the University. RMIT Culture respectfully acknowledges their Ancestors and Elders, past and present. RMIT also acknowledges the Traditional Custodians and their Ancestors of the lands and waters across Australia where we conduct our business.


RMIT Culture unites the University’s public cultural spaces, creative programs and cultural collections, providing opportunities to engage creatively, as well as supporting RMIT’s learning and teaching activities and disseminating its research.
There are many ways that the whole community, as well as RMIT staff, students, industry and research partners, can engage with RMIT Culture – including dynamic programs of exhibitions, conversations, performances and publications, film screenings, online resources, creative development and research opportunities.
Our teams manage the University’s cultural programs and many of its public spaces including presenting a range of events at The Capitol and exhibitions at RMIT Gallery, RMIT Design Hub Gallery and First Site Gallery. RMIT Culture is also the custodian of RMIT’s Cultural Collections (RMIT Design Archives, AFI Research Collection and RMIT Art Collection). You can visit a City Campus Culture trail featuring publicly accessible works from the RMIT Art Collection. We also offer cultural residencies, grants and prizes to support the creative sector and emerging practitioners.
By showcasing and expanding RMIT’s cultural assets through new initiatives and vibrant partnered projects, RMIT Culture strengthens RMIT’s position as a leading university for enterprise, design and innovation.
We acknowledge the continuing culture of the Woi wurrung and Boon wurrung language groups of the eastern Kulin Nation and their contribution to the life and art of this city, including those whose works are represented in RMIT’s exhibitions, collections and cultural resources.


introduction
I am delighted to present to you the RMIT Culture 2023 Impact Report. It has been a privilege to lead the RMIT Culture team through another year of exciting programming. Our purpose is to deliver programming that is deeply engaged with and informed by RMIT Learning & Teaching and Research. We do this with our Collections & Archives, in our Galleries and through Public Events including an extensive program delivered with partners and collaborators across campus, at The Capitol and beyond.
In 2023 we presented bold exhibitions and programs, welcoming visitors and participants to see the world around them with fresh eyes. We have enhanced how we care for our Collections & Archives and made them accessible in new and innovative ways. I am incredibly proud of our team for creating opportunities for our students, academics and broader community to engage with societal challenges through the lens of creative practice.
Throughout the pages of this report you will discover an exceptionally diverse range of projects across our Galleries, Collections & Archives, Partnerships and Events. From creative residencies and prizes that support individuals to deepen their creative practice to exhibitions and commissions that bring dozens of artists and researchers together to explore new ways of belonging, RMIT Culture is building a community of culture lovers. This year we also launched new mechanisms to get feedback from our audiences, participants and collaborators and, as ever, it is deeply humbling to receive such amazing testimonials to the impact we have enabled others to achieve.
PAULA TOAL HEAD, RMIT CULTURE12,346 21 11,426 95 17,000
galleries




RMIT Culture’s galleries welcomed students back to campus in 2023 with the launch of Radical Utopia: An Archaeology of a Creative City, curated by Emerita Professor Harriet Edquist and Dr. Helen Stuckey. Displaying over 200 artifacts from the RMIT Design Archives, the exhibition showcased the significance of RMIT’s Cultural Collections in recounting Melbourne’s history. The accompanying RMIT Design Archives Journal, supported by the Gordon Darling Foundation, was awarded the 2023 Best Small Museum project by AMAGA and PGAV, spotlighting the collaboration’s success.
RMIT Gallery also hosted six scholarly exhibitions highlighting RMIT research outcomes and cultural stories, including Closer Together, which celebrated the 25-year partnership between the Hong Kong Art School and RMIT’s School of Art – the university’s longest running transnational educational partnership – showcasing the work of 18 high-profile alumni. Another exhibition, In Her Own Words: The Ceramics of Janet Beckhouse, honoured the contributions of the esteemed alumna to Australian ceramics. The year ended with a curated exhibition and catalogue celebrating the career of Australian/Indonesian alumna, Tintin Wulia, focusing on her exploration of marginal voices of globalisation and geopolitics.
At Design Hub Gallery, Wild Hope: Conversations for a Planetary Commons, funded with support from the City of Melbourne, was a major exhibition and public program which showcased the work of 21 RMIT researchers, stimulating discussions on planetary issues and highlighting the leadership role of RMIT’s academics in this field. This was a major component of the City of Melbourne’s Now or Never festival. DHG also supported postgraduate outcomes through PHD and Masters by Coursework Practice Research Symposiums, culminating in celebratory exhibitions each semester.
Meanwhile, First Site hosted On-Site, featuring the work of 39 students and recent graduates. The program included well-attended exhibitions and workshops, such as CAST’s dây dó (here/there) popup exhibition of Vietnamese fashion designers, fostering knowledge exchange. First Site’s programming, including online projects from 2020 and 2022, continued to attract growing audiences, showcasing the vitality of RMIT Culture’s initiatives.
Attendance by gallery

Attendance by type





exhibitions
RMIT GALLERY
Radical Utopia
RMIT Gallery
21 February – 27 May
Curators: Harriet Edquist and Helen Stuckey
Artists, Designers, Researchers: Sus an Cohn, Rennie Ellis, Jo Lane, Clarence Chai, Jenny Bannister, Robert Pearce, Simon Burton, Bruce Slorach, Sara Thorn, Michael Rayner, Robert Alcock, John Gollings, Built Moderne, Gavin Brown, Kate Durham, Peter Corrigan, Lyn Tune, Sally Pryor, Jill Posters, Mimmo Cozzolino, Bob Bourne, Geoff Cook, Cos Aslanis, Ian Robertson, Paul Greene, Marius Foley, Colin Russell, Deborah Kelly, Pru Borthwick, David McDiarmid, Paul Drakeford, Peter Lyssiotis, Ted Hopkins, Peter Corrigan, Suzanne Dance, Gregory Burgess, Kevin Borland, Dean Cass, Brian Sadgrove, Kate Gollings, Michael Trudgeon, Vanessa Bird, Kim Halik, Craig Bremner, Elaine Merkus
Closer Together
RMIT Gallery
5 June – 18 August
Curators: Shirky Chan, Rachel Cheung and Tammy Wong Hulbert
Artists: Kay Mei Ling Beadman, Movana Chen, Ryan Christopher Cheng, Kris Coad, Carolyn Eskdale, Daphne Alexis Ho, Jaffa Lam Laam, Ivy Ma King Chu, Sally Mannall, Drew Pettifer, Kate Siu Man Kit, Scotty So, Tang Kwong San, Fiona Wong Lai Ching, June Wong Siu Ling
Supported by: Hong Kong Art School, Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office Spring
RMIT Gallery
September 5 – November 11
Curators: Helen Rayment
Artists, designers, and researchers: Rupert Bunny, Albert Namatjiram, Cresside Collette, Jörg Schmeisser, John Wolseley, Sam Leach, Louise Ann Zahra King, Tate Adams, Sara Lindsay, Louise Rippert, Roger Kemp, Elizabeth Cross, John Farmer, John Olsen, Ernest Buckmaster, Nobuhiro
Shimura, Beyula Puntungka Napanangka, Kate Rohde, Marlene Scerri, Fiona Hiscock, Judy Napangardi Watson, Susan Flavell, Peter Ellis, Lorna Fencer Napurrurla, Shelley Hilton, Michelle Saunders, Lucy Blackmore, Kathlyn Harris, Renata Dabal, Michaela Bruton, David Neale, Mirka Mora
Stephanie Misa: An Altar for the Fleshy Tongue
RMIT Gallery
5 – 30 September
Curators: Stephanie Misa
Artists: Stephanie Misa
In Her Own Words: The Ceramics of Janet Beckhouse
RMIT Gallery
12 October – 11 November
Curators: Helen Rayment
Artists: Janet Beckhouse
Tintin Wulia: Secrets
RMIT Gallery
5 December 2023 – 27 Jan 2024
Curators: Andrew Tetzlaff
Artists: Tintin Wulia
FIRST SITE GALLERY
On-Site Lab 01: Aaron Billings
First Site Gallery
21 February – 17 March
Curator: Lisa Linton
Artists: Aaron Billings
Ex Machine
First Site Gallery
18 April – 12 May
Artists: Dominik Zarowyn
As far as the mind can see
First Site Gallery
18 April – 12 May
Artists: Rhy Dyball
Crawl Space
First Site Gallery
30 May – 23 June
Artists: Ambience Collective
The very very very last day
First Site Gallery
30 May – 23 June
Artists: Judy Kong
On-Site Lab 02: Xanthe Dobbie
First Site Gallery
11 July – 4 August
Curators: Lisa Linton, Xanthe Dobbie
Artists: Xanthe Dobbie, Linda Dements, All
New Gen
Basalt Study
First Site Gallery
22 August – 15 September
Artists: Christine McFetridge
The Dark Botanical Garden
First Site Gallery
22 August – 15 September
Artists: Pug
Off the Well-Worn Path
First Site Gallery
22 August – 15 September
Artists: Ryley Clarke
Am I Late?
First Site Gallery
3 – 13 October
Artists: Master of Communication Design students
dây dó (here/there)
First Site Gallery
23 – 26 October
Artists, Designers: Tom Trandt Minh Ðao, Pham Hoang Linh
Close Proximity
First Site Gallery
12 December 2023 - 19 January 2024
Curator: Michaela Bear
Artists: Lora Adzic, Aaron Ashwood, Maya Grkow, Joel Humphries, Evie Rosa, Amanda Tonkin-Hill, Canwen Zhao, Joy Zhou
DESIGN HUB GALLERY
Wild Hope
Design Hub Gallery
15 August – 30 September
Curators: A/Professor Katrina Simon, Professor Naomi Stead, Professor Wendy Steele, A/Professor Fleur Watson
Creative Practitioners: Marnie Badham and Tammy Wong Hulbert, Vicki Couzens, Dean Cross, D&K (Ricarda Bigolin and Chantal Kirby), with Žiga Testen, Jessie French, Kate Geck, Marc Gibson, Pirjo
Haikola, Tom Park, Kirsten Haydon, Alex Le Guillou, Grace Lillian Lee, Machine Listening (Sean Dockray, James Parker, Joel Stern), Clare McCracken, Rebecca Najdowksi, Polly Stanton, Georgia Nowak and Eugene Perepletchikov, Openwork, Sarah Lynn Rees, RMIT ICON Science, Caitlyn Parry & Helen Duong, Maj Plemenitas, RMIT Architecture Immersive Futures Lab and Superscale (Patrick Macasaet, Vei Tan, Shuming Ivy Zhou and Zechen Huang), David Rousell and Amy Cutter-Mackenzie-Knowles, Greg Semu, These Are the Projects We Do Together (Millie Cattlin, Joseph Norster)
Supported by: City of Melbourne
Part of the Now or Never festival 2023
Practice Research Symposium 1 & 2
Design Hub Gallery
Semester 1 & 2
Architecture and Urban Design End of Semester Exhibitions
Design Hub Gallery Semester 1 & 2
Landscape Architecture End of Semester Exhibitions
Design Hub Gallery
Semester 1 & 2
Interior Design End of Semester Exhibition
Design Hub Gallery
Semester 2





“

The cavernous space is teeming with over twenty, research-driven works from practitioners and collaborative groups across art, architecture, material sciences, and landscape, digital and textile design... It is an ambitious feat to take on such a sizable thematic such as ‘planetary commons’ in this time of poly-crisis. Wild Hope is a plea.
— AUDREY PFISTER, ART AND AUSTRALIA

collection items million dollars in value research visitor hours works accessed by researchers volunteer hours items audited items digitised new acquisitions internal art loans installed journals


RMIT’s Cultural Collections team continue to go from strength to strength, with 2023 marking several significant events, including the 20th anniversary of the AFI Research Collection at RMIT and the joyous Spring collections exhibition, produced in collaboration with the Galleries team. A successful soft launch for RMIT’s groundbreaking Artothek program was also undertaken, establishing it as Australia’s first art lending library for RMIT students.
Independent significance assessments were commissioned for the AFI Research Collection and University Art Collection, completing a long-term project to document and contextualise the importance of RMIT’s cultural assets within the broader Australian collecting context. The findings of these reports were invaluable in informing the team’s new Collection Development Plan, written in consultation with our Collection Advisory Panels. This important strategic document will ensure future collecting meets stakeholder needs and is sustainable while addressing identified collection gaps.
Conservation and preservation remain pillars of our work, with many projects made possible through generous philanthropic support. In 2023 this included digitisation of early 20th century radio plays (AFIRC) as well as rare mid-century architectural drawings by Berenice Harris, the latter through support from Isaacson Davis Foundation (RDA). Interest in RMIT’s collections continues to grow, with research requests returning to pre-Covid numbers with material loaned to La Trobe Regional Gallery, Mildura Arts Centre, Wangaratta Art Gallery, RMIT Gallery and Design Hub Gallery for exhibition.





“

The Artothek program has meant a lot to me this year... It has significantly enhanced the ambiance in my space and improved my wellbeing.
— JIDAPHA WANNALEE, PARTICIPANT


27 12 8 1 attendees events discussions screenings workshops performance


2023 public events generated community engagement with RMIT research, showcased alumni accomplishments and included collaborations with high-profile creative industry partners such as The Wheeler Centre, Melbourne Fringe and Always Live.
Highlights included the partnered presentation of the Birrarangga Film Festival Opening Night, amplifying Indigenous voices and narratives, Screen Presence 23, in partnership with the Chinese Museum, which celebrated Chinese Australian stories on screen, and The 2023 Capitol Commission, Upside Down People, showcasing RMIT neurodiverse and Indigenous artists and fostering inclusivity.
Collaborations with the City of Melbourne on Now or Never and the Melbourne Conversations series provided forums for thoughtprovoking discussions, including a screening and Q&A with Bob Brown and Food Waste is Bananas, spotlighting RMIT researchers’ expertise in food transformation. Launching the Planetary Civics Initiative at RMIT, we hosted social entrepreneur and visionary thinker Indy Johar as he explained the need for equitable and regenerative futures.
Collaborations with RMIT Future Play Lab showcased RMIT’s expertise in game-making and placemaking, activating Melbourne’s spaces with site-specific initiatives, while The Best Films You’ve Never Seen series, in partnership with RMIT Cinema studies, offered contextual introductions from RMIT academics to enrich audiences’ film knowledge, connecting academia with the broader community. 21 RMIT alumni were featured alongside national and international artists and speakers.
I am still lost for words — it was such a beautiful occasion and lovely people all around, behind the scenes and in the audience! We couldn’t have dreamt of a more fitting way to end our tour.
— LAURENCE BILLIET, DIRECTOR, GENERAL STRIKE PROJECTS ON THE GIANTS WITH BOB BROWN




Audience demographics


“

Teaming up with RMIT Culture is always a pleasure. The team dives into every project with curiosity and creativity, consistently delivering top-notch exhibitions and events.
— KATE MCKENZIE, CITY OF MELBOURNE, NOW OR NEVER TEAMengagement with learning & teaching


The Partnerships team leveraged RMIT Culture’s industry partnership with Tim Ross/Modernister Films to build a semesterlong studio project where Digital Media students designed content for the Tim Ross Live performance at The Capitol, which included a briefing, mid-point review and final assessment from Tim Ross himself. The team also worked with Associate Professor Adrian Danks in the School of Media and Communication for a semesterlong studio for Cinema Studies students exploring The Capitol and the concept of Phantom Cinema. The Partnerships team participated in the briefing, mid-point review and final assessment of the student’s work and provided support and advice to the student and academic throughout the semester to realise the public outcomes of the Studio.
The team also collaborated with Associate Professor Darrin Verhagen in School of Design for a semester-long project supporting the 2023 Capitol Commission: Upside Down People through student work from the RMIT Digital Media’s Heightened Multisensory Experience Studio. The project offered students the opportunity to understand the requirements of neurodiversity in an artistic setting, engage sensitively with cultural heritage, develop artistic skills and contribute to a significant public project.
Working with RMIT Culture on the 2023 Capitol Commission: Upside Down People was a transformative experience. The project offered students the opportunity to understand the requirements of neurodiversity in an artistic setting, engage sensitively with cultural heritage, develop artistic skills, and contribute to a significant public project.
— DR DARRIN VERHAGEN, ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR, DIGITAL MEDIA (SOUND)

studios
Master of Communication Design students participated in the Curating and Exhibiting Design studio in collaboration with the RMIT Design Archives, culminating in an interpretive window display about the Clarence Chai archive. The Design Archives also facilitated two Master of Architecture electives across the year, focusing on the Graeme Gunn collection designed to reflect on past architecture practices and technology, as well as heritage and archival theory/ processes.
The AFI Research Collection facilitated two new exciting practicebased studios with Interior Design in 2023. The first, with lecturer Michelle Mantsio, encouraged students to reimagine the set design of the Australian film Dogs in Space for a contemporary context, while the second explored concepts of interior and interiority through the genre of horror cinema, with Ronnie van Hout and Tiger Zheng. Studio outcomes included a range of creative outcomes including short films, mind-maps and set designs.

residencies
The creative residency program at McCraith House further enriched our creative industry partnerships, supporting 10 independent creatives within the creative sector. RMIT’s residency studios were well activated with 8 graduating students undertaking a studio residency program to continue and support the development of their practice post-graduation. An end of year curated exhibition in First Site Gallery celebrated the graduate residents’ achievements. We were delighted to see our international residency program reactivated. RMIT Culture hosted 3 artist residents from Krems (Austria) and HBK (Germany).


grants, fellowships & commissions
The AFI Research Collection (AFIRC) invites proposals from scholars around Australia wishing to undertake research that utilises the Collection’s resources and promotes the AFIRC through a published outcome. The 2023 AFIRC Fellowship was awarded to film critic, filmmaker and screenwriter Digby Houghton. He will spend his fellowship investigating Melbourne’s historic film culture to form the basis of a screenplay titled Cine-Files. This is the first time the fellowship has been awarded for a creative outcome.
RMIT Culture oversees and delivers the Capitol Commission, made possible through the Capitol Innovation Fund, which enables an applied, practice-based approach through creative initiatives at The Capitol. Culture produced the 2023 Capitol Commission: Upside Down People, an immersive audio-visual experience exploring threatened bat species and autistic inclusion, which provided a platform for neurodiverse and Indigenous artists from RMIT.
Engaging with RMIT Digital Media’s Heightened Multisensory
Experience Studio augmented the performance work with highquality student-led work. The project fostered partnerships, notably with Zoos Victoria, enabling public engagement. It also showcased RMIT’s expertise, fostering collaboration between PhD student Sara Kian Judge and Zoos Victoria researchers and offering industry placements for students from Melbourne Polytechnic and RMIT Media.

The Cultural Visions Grant is an opportunity for an RMIT student to explore the dynamics and exchange of culture in Australia through an original artistic work. Successful projects highlight diversity and engage a public audience to reflect on cultural perspectives. We worked with our incredible panel to assess the 2023 Cultural Visions Grant shortlist from a range of disciplines. The winner was selected from the Media discipline, Ji Li, who received $10,000 to realise his new creative work, titled New Life. The documentary will highlight the mental wellbeing challenges faced by immigrants in Australia through a series of short documentaries.



In 2023, RMIT Culture continued to foster strategic partnerships aligning with the University’s mission of empowerment through learning and community engagement. Collaborating internally with schools, portfolios, hubs and research groups, alongside external industry partners, RMIT Culture facilitated transformative experiences for students and communities alike. Through collaborative programming with partners, the focus remained on research translation via public outputs such as exhibitions, talks, performances and publications, leveraging the expertise of RMIT’s researchers. These partnerships expanded audience reach while offering students immersive experiences through partnered studios, work-integrated learning (WIL), and industry placements across various disciplines.
The Partnerships team nurtured new and enriched exemplary partnerships throughout 2023 — including those with Yarra Ranges and Bendigo Shire Council bringing poetry to local communities for wellbeing, supporting Birrarangga Film Festival, delivering a rich program of film screenings and panel discussions for Australia’s Social Sciences Week and once again working closely with City of Melbourne, Melbourne International Games Week and The Wheeler Centre to bring RMIT research to a broad audience.
New collaborations with The Nature Conservancy, The 86 Festival, Always Live and Fringe Festival enabled exemplary student outcomes, showcased RMIT expertise and generated deep community engagement.
partners & supporters
ACMI
Always Live Festival
Amnesty International
Asia Society
Birrarangga Film Festival
Chinese Museum
City of Melbourne:
Conversations Series and Now or Never Festival
Collingwood Yards
Craft Victoria
Frankston Arts Centre
Footscray Community Arts
Fringe Festival
Future Women
Gordon Darling Foundation
Great Southern Reef
Hong Kong Art School
Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office
Melbourne City of Literature Office
Melbourne International Games Week
Modernister Shows
Blak & Bright First Nations Literary Festival
Melbourne Zoo
Melbourne Polytechnic Creative Arts
Nature Conservancy Australia
Nell & Gerald McCraith Endowment Fund
Social Sciences Week
The 86
The Sydney Peace Prize
The Wheeler Centre
Yarra Ranges Regional Museum




Birrarangga Film Festival had the pleasure and honour of working with the RMIT Culture team to present our opening night... [it] was one of the highlights for the entire team at the festival and the audience’s feedback was amazing as well.
— DAMIENNE PRADIER, PRODUCER, BIRRARANGGA FILM FESTIVALInternational Women’s Day: Power and Politics
Her dad was killed, but that’s not what stops this Bhutto from entering politics
The Sydney Morning Herald 23 February 2023
Radical Utopia
Melbourne Art and Design, Past and Present
The New York Times 23 March 2023
Radical Utopia review Fluoro 15 March 2023
Radical Utopia review
Australian Book Review 14 March 2023
Everyday Oceans
Radio interview
Triple R - Radio Marinara 25 June 2023
The Best Films You’ve Never Seen: Noir Edition
Radio interview
Triple R - Primal Screen 10 July 2023
Closer Together
Shirky Chan and Tammy Wong Hulbert interview
Hongkongology 13 July 2023
Closer Together broadcast video
SBS Cantonese Radio 9 July 2023
Kay Beadman interview 3MBS Radio
July 2023
Wild Hope
Vicki Couzens interview Triple R 5 September 2023
Renowned social architect Indy Johar is speaking in Melbourne tonight Beat Magazine 21 August 2023
New Research Partnership Targets LargeScale Planetary Issues Mirage News 21 August 2023
Planetary Auditions highlight Beat Magazine 28 August 2023
RMIT joins forces with Dark Matter Labs for new research initiative Architecture AU 28 August 2023
Wild Hope announcement e-flux 14 September 2023
Wild Hope announcement ARTPIL September 2023
Wild Hope review Art + Australia September 2023
Tim Ross: Designing a Legacy Live
Radio interview ABC Radio Melbourne August 2023
Radio interview Triple R - Uncommon Sense 22 August 2023
Social Sciences Week: Disturbing Technology
Radio interview Triple R - Primal Screen 4 September 2023
Future Play Lab: TRON
Future Play Lab Highlight Beat Magazine
September 2023
Future Play Lab: 64 Ways of Being feature Beat Magazine 2 October 2023
Food Waste is Bananas
Radio interview
Triple R - Eat It 1 October 2023
Radio interview
ABC RN - Big Ideas 30 November 2023
Ed Yong
Radio interview
ABC RN - Late Night Live November 2023
Radio interview
ABC RN - Big Ideas 20 Novemeber 2023
In Absence: Reflections
Radio interview
Triple R - Banksia 9 October 2023
Richard Flanagan
Event highlight Beat Magazine 23 October 2023
Upside Down People
Radio interview
Triple R - Breakfasters 31 October 2023
Radio interview
PBS FM - The Breakfast Spread 1 November 2023
Sydney Peace Prize
Event highlight Beat Magazine 23 October 2023
The Best Films You’ve Never Seen: The Devil’s Playground
Radio Interview
ABC Radio Melbourne - Evenings 6 November 2023
Radio interview 3CR - Showreel 11 November 2023
Event highlight Melbourne Cinematheque post 13 November 2023
Tim Winton: Nature Writing Prize
Radio Interview
ABC Radio Melbourne - Drive 9 November 2023
Author Tim Winton lashes oil and gas industry’s ‘crime against humanity’ The Sydney Morning Herald / The Age 22 November 2023
Caroline Polachek: Always Live
Live event recording ABC RN - Big Ideas 12 December 2023
Tintin Wulia: Secrets
Tintin Wulia, Natalie Kon-yu, Anna Emina and Celine Saoud interview Triple R 20 December 2023
Tintin Wulia interview 3MBS 2 December 2023
our people
Head, RMIT Culture
Paula Toal
Manager, Collections & Archives
Elizabeth Marsden
Manager, RMIT Galleries
Helen Rayment
Manager, Partnerships & Engagement
Alison Barker
Manager, Business & Continuous Improvement
Verity Hayward
Business & Continuous Improvement Officer
Ro Lynagh
Communications & Digital Engagement Coordinator
Juliette Younger
Creative Producer, Partnerships & Engagement
Helen Withycombe
Partnerships Coordinator & Event Producer, Partnerships & Engagement
Jenny Branagan
Senior Production Coordinator
Erik North
Production Officer
Tim McLeod
Technical Production Coordinator
Simon Maisch
Senior Curator
Andrew Tetzlaff
Exhibition Coordinator
Galleries
Julia Powles
Engagement Coordinator
Galleries
Lisa Linton
Creative Projects Officer
Elise Barton
Exhibition Assistant Michaela Bear
Exhibition Assistant
Celine Saoud
Exhibition Assistant Louise Meuwissen
Exhibition Assistant Jemima Penny
Art Collection Coordinator
Nick Devlin
Collections Coordinator
Jenna Blyth
Curatorial Officer
Ann Carew
Archives Officer
Simone Rule
Collection Coordinator
Olympia Szilagyi
Collections Officer
Simon Strong
Collections Assistant
Leah Martin
Collections Team
Grace Mooney
Production Team
Ari Sharp
Bec Bartlett
Christopher Forwood
Ellen Waite
Elliot Taylor
Jonty Ransome
Mason Cox
Nikolaus Dolman
Olivia Borghesan
Pat Mooney
Rob Curulli
Robert Bridgewater
Yvette James
Gallery Attendants
Alex Bloom
Andari Suherlan
Audrey Merton
Bek Steel
Kyla Sun
Lowell Demetita
Maud Freeman
Melissa Viola
Vivian Qiu
Partnered Projects Team
Elizabeth McCarthy
Sally Grainger
Events Team
Callum McKinnon
Celine Marge Mercado
Clarine Wilmar
Damian Sabatini
Hannah Camilleri
Jasmin Seale
Lara Tumak
Nicholas Leong
Olivia Summerhayes
Ruby Neal
Simone Etheve
Wing Ting Sze
Yasmine Sharaf
Tom Backhaus
ADVISORY PANELS & COMMITTEES
Cultural Advisory Panel
Martyn Hook (Chair)
Dene Cici
Jan Clohessy
Nicole Eaton
Lliam Freeman
Amy Harrington
Mohan Krishnamoorthy
Mathews Nkhoma
Jacque Payne
Clare Russell
Naomi Stead
Kit Wise
RMIT Design Archives
Advisory Panel
Beau de Belle
Ying-Lan Dann
Tarryn Handcock
Simon Lockrey
Christine Phillips
Julian Pratt
Michael Reason
Sarah Teasley
Andrew Tetzlaff
Noel Waite
RMIT Design Archives
Journal Editorial Board
Noel Waite
Suzie Attihill
Michael Bogle
Philip Goad
Brad Haylock
Robyn Healy
Andrew Leach
Michael Spooner
Sarah Teasley
Laurene Vaughan
RMIT Art Collection Advisory Panel
Nick Bastin
Mikala Dwyer
Peter Ellis
Samantha Hamilton
Alan Hill
Fiona Hillary
Helen Rayment
Darrin Verhagen
AFI Research Collection Advisory Panel
Djoymi Baker
Adrian Danks
Stephen Gaunson
John Hughs
Alexia Kannas
Simon Rose
Stayci Taylor
Rachel Wilson
Cultural Collections
Industry Advisor
Maryanne McCubb
IMAGES IN ORDER OF APPEARANCE
Jessie French, ‘To sow the wind and reap the whirlwind’ 2023 at Wild Hope, Design Hub Gallery, 2023. Photo: Tobias Titz.
Openwork, ‘Plan B’, Wild Hope, RMIT Design Hub Gallery, 2023. Photo: Tobias Titz.
On-Site Lab 01, Aaron Billings, Closing Party, First Site Gallery, 2023. Photo: Keelan O’Hehir.
RMIT Art Collection, 2023. Photo: MarieLuise Skibbe.
Close Proximity installation, First Site Gallery, 2023. Photo: Sebastian Kainey.
Tintin Wulia: Secrets, RMIT Gallery, 2023. Photo: Christian Capurro.
Radical Utopia installation, RMIT Gallery, 2023. Photo: Tobias Titz.
Wild Hope opening night, Design Hub Gallery, 2023. Photo: Marie-Luise Skibbe.
On-Site Lab 01, Aaron Billings, Closing Party, First Site Gallery, 2023. Photo: Keelan O’Hehir.
Closer Together, Pao Gallery, Hong Kong, 2023.
Closer Together installation, RMIT Gallery, 2023. Photo: Sebastian Kainey.
Scotty So performs at Closer Together’s opening night, RMIT Gallery, 2023. Photo: Phuong Le.
Detail of ‘Peace’ 2012, In Her Own Words: The Ceramics of Janet Beckhouse, RMIT Gallery, 2023. Photo: Sebastian Kainey.
Vivian Qiu, ‘Life Line’ 2023, Slow Making, First Site Gallery, 2023. Photo: Sebastian Kainey.
Close Proximity installation, First Site Gallery, 2023. Photo: Sebastian Kainey.
Tintin Wulia: Secrets installation, 2023, RMIT Gallery, 2023. Photo: Christian Capurro.
Wild Hope installation, Design Hub Gallery, 2023. Photo: Tobias Titz.
AFI Research Collection, 2023. Photo: MarieLuise Skibbe.
RMIT Design Archives, 2023. Photo: MarieLuise Skibbe.
RMIT Art Collection, 2023. Photo: MarieLuise Skibbe
AFI Research Collection, 2023. Photo: MarieLuise Skibbe.
RMIT Design Archives window, 2023. Photo: Marie-Luise Skibbe.
RMIT Art Collection, 2023. Photo: MarieLuise Skibbe
Indy Johar keynote for Wild Hope, The Capitol, 2023. Photo: Marie-Luise Skibbe.
Writing Blak Legacies, The Capitol, 2023. Photo: James Henry.
Play Capitol Arcade, The Capitol, 2023. Photo: Kit Edwards.
Bob Brown at screening of The Giants, The Capitol, 2023. Photo: MJ Bentley.
Caroline Polachek in conversation with Brodie Lancaster, The Capitol, 2023. Photo: T15 Media.
Director Fred Schepisi at The Best Films You’ve Never Seen: The Devil’s Playground, The Capitol, 2023. Photo: Helen Withycombe.
Tony Birch speaking at Writing Blak Legacies, The Capitol, 2023. Photo: James Henry.
RMIT’s Bowen Street Press, 2023.
Tim Ross live performance, The Capitol, 2023. Photo: Harrison Moss.
Behind the scenes of Upside Down People, 2023. Photo: Helen Withycombe.
Clarence Chai window display, RMIT Design Archives, 2023. Photo: Ann Carew.
2023 Capitol Commission: Upside Down People, The Capitol, 2023. Photo: Helen Withycombe.
McCraith House.
Ji Li, ‘Where is my friend’s home?’ (film still) 2024. Photo: Ji Li.
64 Ways of Being activation, 2023. Photo: Marie-Luise Skibbe.
Colson Whitehead in conversation, The Capitol, 2023. Photo: TJ Garvie.
International Women’s Day event Power and Politics, The Capitol, 2023. Photo: Ernest J Arriagada.
Play Capitol Arcade, The Capitol, 2023. Photo: Kit Edwards.
64 Ways of Being activation, 2023. Photo: Marie-Luise Skibbe.
Birrarangga Film Festival opening, The Capitol, 2023.